研究表明维生素D能降低老年人骨折的危险
(2009-03-25 08:18:19)
标签:
健康英语学习 |
分类: 饮食、营养与健康 |
WASHINGTON, March
23 (Xinhua) -- Oral vitamin D supplements at a dose of at least 400
international units per day are associated with a reduced risk of
bone fractures in older adults, according to results of a
meta-analysis published Monday in the U.S. journal Archives of
Internal Medicine.
"The anti-fracture
benefits of vitamin D have been
questioned by several recent trials, leading to uncertainty among
patients and physicians regarding recommendations for vitamin D
supplementation," the authors write as background information in
the article. "Factors that may obscure a benefit of vitamin D are
low adherence to treatment, low dose of vitamin D or the use of
less potent ergocalciferol (vitamin D2)."
Heike Bischoff-Ferrari of the University of Zurich, University
Hospital, Zurich, Switzerland, and colleagues performed a
meta-analysis on 12 previously published clinical trials of oral
vitamin D supplements among adults age 65 or older. These
double-blind randomized controlled trials involved 42,279
participants (average age 78) and looked at non-vertebral
(non-spinal) fractures, including eight trials of 40,886 participants
specifically studying hip fractures.
When the results of the trials were pooled, vitamin D supplements
decreased the risk of non-vertebral fractures by 14 percent and of hip fractures by 9 percent. The authors then pooled the
results of only the nine trials in which participants received
doses of more than 400 international units per day. At this dosage,
vitamin D supplements reduced non-vertebral fractures by 20 percent and hip fractures by 18 percent.
Doses of 400 international units per day or lower did not reduce
the risk of either fracture type. A greater reduction in risk was also seen
among trial participants whose blood levels of 25-hydroxyvitamin D
(a commonly used measure of blood vitamin D levels) achieved a
greater increase.
Among individuals taking high doses of vitamin D, additional
calcium did not appear to have any further protective effect
against fractures. "Physiologically, the calcium-sparing effect
of vitamin D may explain why we did not see an additional benefit
of calcium supplementation at a higher dose of vitamin D," the
authors write.
"The greater fracture
reduction with a higher received dose
or higher achieved 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels for both
non-vertebral fractures and hip fractures suggests that higher doses of vitamin D should
be explored in future research to optimize anti-fracture efficacy," they conclude.
"Also, it is possible that greater benefits may be achieved with
earlier initiation of vitamin D supplementation and longer duration
of use. Our results do not support use of low-dose vitamin D with
or without calcium in the prevention of fractures among older individuals."